An snRNA-seq aging clock for the fruit fly head sheds light on sex-biased aging
Journal:
bioRxiv
Published Date:
Feb 23, 2026
Abstract
Although multiple high-performing epigenetic aging clocks exist, few are based directly on gene expression. Such transcriptomic aging clocks allow us to identify potential age-associated genes directly. However, most existing transcriptomic clocks model a subset of genes and are limited in their ability to predict novel biomarkers. With the growing application of single-cell sequencing, there is a need for robust single-cell transcriptomic aging clocks. Moreover, aging clocks have yet to be applied to investigate the elusive phenomenon of sex differences in aging. We introduce TimeFlies, a pan-cell-type snRNA-seq aging clock for the Drosophila melanogaster head. TimeFlies uses deep learning to classify the donor age of cells based on genome-wide gene expression profiles. Using explainability methods, we identified key marker genes contributing to the classification, with lncRNAs showing up as highly enriched among predicted biomarkers. lncRNA:roX1 and lncRNA:roX2 are top clock genes across cell types. Both are regulators of X chromosome dosage compensation, a pathway previously found to be significantly affected by aging in the mouse brain. We validated these findings experimentally in Drosophila, showing a decrease in survival when dosage compensation is inhibited in vivo. Furthermore, we trained sex-specific TimeFlies clocks and noted significant differences in model predictions and explanations between male and female clocks, suggesting that different pathways drive aging in males and females.